• An earthquake hits Iran;
• Camp David negotiators meet on final day to hammer out agreement;
• South Africa reportedly accepts neutron bombs from the US;
• South Africa meets with representatives of five nations to discuss Namibian independence;
• The UN moves to set up security systems for Israel and Lebanon;
• The Presbyterian Church endorses the Nestle boycott;
• The USSR declares equality for national minorities;
• Charles Boyer’s death was a suicide

As with many of these news broadcasts over the Jonestown P.A. system, Jones includes feature-length pieces. There are two on this tape. It opens with a lengthy piece on Guyana’s consideration on whether to accept the conditions of a loan from the International Monetary Fund, and closes with a discussion of the benefits of calcium in combatting depression, insomnia, nervousness and irritability.

Also as in other tapes, Jones periodically makes comments on the side, oftentimes connecting the news of the day to a message he wants to give his community. The apartheid conditions in South Africa and the control of the country by the U.S. corporate elite remind him that the people of Jonestown need to work “so that we can make money. Not only to save the people here, but so we can reach out and touch those that are struggling all over the world.” He reiterates the point a few moments later: “Let us think how much we can give to the struggle, how many people we could liberate. We have over a hundred sixty-three [people] from the prison systems alone, begging, … begging through church people who are our friends to please let them come over here to start a new life.” More than that, though, Jones promotes the work ethic throughout, highlighting the joy and medical benefits of labor without exploitation.

The apparent suicide of Charles Boyer, who killed himself two days after his wife’s death – “He wrote the script, produced and directed it and in fact arranged for both of them to die with dignity” – leads Jones to consider how empty life is in Western society, how much it is missing for people without socialism. The people of Jonestown aren’t like that, though. They know how important they are to each other, to their children, to the world wide struggle. “We have so much to live for, that we don’t die based just on one person’s passing.”

This tape was made two weeks after Mark Lane last visited the community, and apparently he had fallen ill. Jones takes time out several times to extend good wishes to the attorney for a complete recovery, and expresses his appreciation for how much their advocate has done in chasing down the conspiracy against them.

FBI Summary:

Date of transcription: 5/31/79

In connection with the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s investigation into the assassination of U.S. Congressman LEO J. RYAN at Port Kaituma, Guyana, South America, on November 18, 1978, a tape recording was obtained. This tape recording was located in Jonestown, Guyana, South America, and was turned over to U.S. Officials in Guyana and subsequently transported to the United States.

On May 31, 1979, Special Agent (name deleted) reviewed the tape numbered 1B93-35. This tape was found to contain the following:
News and commentary by JIM JONES. News items included topics such as: